The DC Circuit is a well-respected court so the SCOTUS may give some weight to this.

I don't like the opinion though. Rights, what rights?

“The right to be free from federal regulation is not absolute, and yields to the imperative that Congress be free to forge national solutions to national problems, no matter how local — or seemingly passive — their individual origins,” Silberman wrote.

fug it, where is my sterilize all the stupid people plan!!?? We have a national problem with stupid people and I proposed a national solution of sterilizing them to solve the national problem. My plan passes constitutional muster.

The DC Circuit is a well-respected court so the SCOTUS may give some weight to this.

I don't like the opinion though. Rights, what rights?

fug it, where is my sterilize all the stupid people plan!!?? We have a national problem with stupid people and I proposed a national solution of sterilizing them to solve the national problem. My plan passes constitutional muster.

if you trust Congress on this then you are hands down a total jackhole buffon.

Reading the words of this lawsuit, it is built around calling Congress' ability to apply a law equally into question, not whether the substance of the enforced law is within congressional authority (it makes a play at that with the 1st amendment stuff, but a poor one).

This is a joke lawsuit brought about by an evangelical organization on bogus grounds. Not exactly the thing I'd like to see built up as precedent.

Reading the words of this lawsuit, it is built around calling Congress' ability to apply a law equally into question, not whether the substance of the enforced law is within congressional authority (it makes a play at that with the 1st amendment stuff, but a poor one).

This is a joke lawsuit brought about by an evangelical organization on bogus grounds. Not exactly the thing I'd like to see built up as precedent.

Yeah you have to be very careful about who challenges these things. The deck is already stacked in favor of the Feds (SCOTUS usually defers to their powers, Feds have unlimited funds to fight these suits, Feds have already researched the constitutionality so they have a head start).

I would love to see the SCOTUS strike this and many other laws down as not being within congressional powers, but that is just silly. Once we greatly politicized the SCOTUS nomination process (which was inherently politicized anyways), the SCOTUS became largely a rubber stamp for Congress and the Prez.